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It's a beauty, man! Low speed and plenty of push. To me, that counts as much as the cosmetics.I have a question. Do I see those LED magnet wires *exposed* underneath, in the photo showing the trucks? Did you leave them that way, or am I not understanding the photos? I wouldn't leave magnet wires exposed to the "elements" anywhere, even though they are up under the trucks where probably nobody can every touch them. Maybe put a thin flat piece of something non-conductive, like styrene, as a protective "hatch" over them?
I've been using Crystal-Kleer for insulating LED's in brass tube - when I'm doing headlights the brass tube does a great job of stopping light leaks as well as providing a surface for adhesives or solder.If you use something like that you have the 'marginal' benefit that if by some awful thing the LED does blow out, you can get it back out of the tube as that crystal kleer stuff stays rubbery for decades and doesnt permanently adhere to the inside of the tube. I started to use that stuff after a particularly nasty episode of putting tricolor LED's in brass signal heads and having one blow out. Now I can just push the bad LED back out with a needle or something, rewire, and stuff it back in again.And for those of you that lack the soldering skills of a brain surgeon (me), CMR products offers PRE-WIRED Pico LED's (1mm x .5mm size) in various colors. I got a couple amber ones to do amber strobe lights in a custom build and managed to get them inserted in a .035 white styrene rod drilled out .020 and insert the LED edgewise up inside it. Worked great.I'm glad to see you pushing from behind with the smokebox up. Smokebox down on a grade that steep would probably result in an exposed crown sheet over the firebox and a boiler explosion. Shays's could easily handle about a 5% grade even nose-downhill but over that you better either have a locomotive designed for it or a blast zone on the hill. You'll see Cass NEVER does nose-down on the 9% Whittaker or Bald Knob grades. If this looks nuts on a model check out the actual Cass grades:https://www.msrlha.org/track-guide.htmlThat whole double-worm thing on a Shay is just marvelous. The Atlas Shay drive is darn good but when you get this one right, it's far better.
I see that your shay (shays, really - there seem to be two in the pictures) are pulling/pushing LOADS up the grade, rather than empties like the prototype. Impressive!
Outstanding.Simply outstanding.